billw55, on 2012-September-25, 06:50, said:
Now this is really interesting.
Why should 6♣ be considered rather than 6♥? We are already committed to the six level. We have at least nine hearts and probably ten. How likely is it that 6♣ is going to be a better contract than 6♥? Why give out this potentially valuable (and as yet totally undisclosed) information to the opponents? Or is the intent to encourage partner to bid 7/6 with a double fit and a spade void, should ops try to save? That doesn't seem like a good idea with this zero control hand.
Who's making? Who's saving? I don't know, but if I bid 6
♣ *partner* might. Sure, so might the opponents, but when I bid 6
♥ and they bid 6
♠ (because 5
♠ was making, clearly, and 6
♥ is a good sac, and we're 20 down, so the odds say go), how much harder is it for partner to get his decision right than if I show him the massive two-suiter that I opened on? And imply that I might be a little light on defensive tricks (because I didn't give partner a chance to double)?
6
♣ is *never* playing. It's just giving partner the tools to make the right decision over 6
♠. After all, if -1200 in 5
♠xx is "so bad", -1430 or -1660 in 6
♠ is just as bad. I bid 6 because I think it's a save against -650/-680; I bid 6
♣ because 7 will be a save against -1430, but not against +100/+200.
Yes, we need to find people who are willing to give up -6x0, to see if they're willing to give up -1200/-1600 when partner says "you opened, this is going down". I hope I'm not one of them.
Another question is whether this is a FP situation (almost certainly not), and if it is, is pass-and-pull is compared to the alternatives.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)